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      Roman HistoryRoman senateRoman magistrates
Extracted from Cambridge Ancient History Vol. 12, 2nd ed., Cambridge 2005.
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    • Roman History
Johnson, Scott Fitzgerald. 2018. “The Languages of Christianity on the Silk Roads and the Transmission of Mediterranean Culture into Central Asia.” In Empires and Exchanges in Eurasian Late Antiquity: Rome, China, Iran, and the Steppe,... more
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      ChristianityGreek LiteratureRoman HistoryLate Antique and Byzantine Studies
A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE FALL OF THE ROMAN REPUBLIC FROM SULLA TO CAESAR AUGUSTUS
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      Roman HistoryDemocracyOrthodox ChristianityAugustus
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      Roman HistoryMaterial Culture StudiesMaterial culture of religionRoman Religion
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      Ancient HistoryRoman HistoryJewish StudiesEarly Christianity
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      HistoryAncient HistoryEconomic HistoryArchaeology
Augustus’ success in implementing monarchical rule at Rome is often attributed to innovations in the symbolic language of power, from the star marking Julius Caesar’s deification to buildings like the Palatine complex and Forum Augustum... more
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      Discourse AnalysisLatin LiteratureRoman HistoryIconography
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      Greek LiteratureLatin LiteratureRoman HistoryHomer
Johnson, Scott Fitzgerald. 2019. “Where Is Syriac Pilgrimage Literature in Late Antiquity? Exploring the Absence of a Genre.” In Empire and After: Historiography and Space in Late Antiquity, edited by Peter Van Nuffelen, 164–180.... more
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      Roman HistoryLate Antique and Byzantine HistoryByzantine LiteratureHistoriography
This paper aims to set out the evidence for regional patterns in diet during the Roman period. It uses a specific sector of archaeological data to explore the notions of Romanization, inter-regional influence and diachronic change. That... more
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      Roman HistoryZooarchaeologyArchaeozoologyHellenistic and Roman Asia Minor
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      Roman HistoryTopography of Ancient Rome (Archaeology)Imperial RomeRoman social history
This article aims to analyze Roman domestic spaces excavated in the region of Celtiberia in central Spain. The main goal is to identify the relationship between social patterns and the spatial configuration of houses. The application of... more
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      Ancient HistoryArchaeologyRoman HistorySpace Syntax
The Canterbury Hinterland Project (CHP) has combined aerial photographic and LiDAR analysis, synthesis of HER and other data across east Kent with targeted survey south and east of Canterbury. We present possible hillforts, temples, large... more
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      Roman HistoryIron AgeRoman Archaeology
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      Roman HistoryDeath StudiesGreek EpigraphyHeroism
Since Maria Teresa Cipriano's and Marie‐Brigitte Carre's seminal 1989 paper ‘Production et typologie des amphores sur la côte adriatique de l'Italie’ in the volume ‘Amphores romaines et histoire économique’, our knowledge of Adriatic... more
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      HistoryAncient HistoryEconomic HistoryArchaeology
In this volume we have brought together a group of scholars working on different periods and regions of the Mediterranean to study the family from the earliest historical periods of the Mediterranean to early medieval times spanning a... more
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      Ancient HistoryRoman HistoryPapyrologyFamily studies
This paper examines the evidence for Saharan trade in the Roman period in the light of recent fieldwork in the Libyan Sahara by the Fazzan Project and the Desert Migrations Project and by the Italian Mission in the Acacus. The results of... more
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      HistoryAncient HistoryEconomic HistoryArchaeology
Ostia is one of the most extensively excavated cities of the Roman period. The port-city of Rome, which today lies 4km from the coastline, was established in a very constrained environment at the mouth of the River Tiber. Based on a... more
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      ArchaeologyGeomorphologyRoman HistoryCoastal Management
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      Economic HistoryRoman HistoryEconomic TheoryRoman Economy
This study is based on the analysis of some inscriptions which date to the tetrarchic age (approximately between 285 and 312) and have received little attention in scholarship. They are dedications of statues of deities, set up in... more
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      Economic HistoryArchaeologyRoman HistoryGreek Epigraphy
This article proposes a new reading of a late first-century c.e. inscribed dedication from Todi (Umbria) as an accusation of witchcraft, a rhetorical text aimed at propagating a particular story among the local community. Historical and... more
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      Roman HistoryWritingLatin EpigraphyWitchcraft (Anthropology Of Religion)
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      Economic HistoryRoman HistoryItalian StudiesPoverty
This paper examines the relationship between the design and use of mechanical technology, patronage and investment, and economic return, using three main case studies: water-lifting devices, the water-powered grain mill, and the diverse... more
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      HistoryAncient HistoryEconomic HistoryArchaeology
Abrupt climate change in the past is thought to have disrupted societies by accelerating environmental degradation, potentially leading to cultural collapse. Linking climate change directly to societal disrup- tion is challenging because... more
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      BotanyLandscape EcologyGeographyPhysical Geography
The book furnishes a unique insight into the world of meanings and emotions associated with hospital life by including narratives from both patients and caregivers. The story is told in a dozen episodes which illustrate the transformation... more
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      Roman HistoryMedieval HistoryEarly Modern HistoryHistory of Medicine
This article presents an edited Greek text, English translation, and analysis of a new historical fragment, probably from Dexippus’ Scythica, first published by Gunther Martin and Jana Grusková in 2014. The fragment, preserved in a... more
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      Ancient HistoryRoman HistoryRoman HistoriographyFragmentary Greek Historiography
The article illustrates the link of an anonymous kitharodos from Kos with the
Sebasta of Naples and presents the hypothesis of his identification with Helenos son of
Iason, known for having won many contests.
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      Roman HistoryGreek EpigraphyGreek and Roman EpigraphyAncient Sport and Festivals
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      Economic HistoryRoman History
Debates on the nature of the Roman city and its relation to the countryside have lately moved towards questioning the validity of the very category of ‘the city’, both analytically and in terms of past reality. While archaeology has long... more
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      Roman HistoryRoman EconomyCeramics (Archaeology)Terra Sigillata
Robinson Crusoe's memoirs form "the most fascinating boy's book ever written", wrote Leslie Stephen. This self-help book, within a matter of decades, had reached an audience as wide as any book ever written in English. Edited by Daniel... more
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      ArchaeologyNear Eastern ArchaeologyPrehistoric ArchaeologyRoman History
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      HistoryAncient HistoryMilitary HistoryClassics
The architectural evolution of the Regia between the end of the « Kingship » and the beginning of the Republic doesn’t allow to confirm the concomitant appearance of the rex sacrorum and of the republican political régime. This priest was... more
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      Roman HistoryAncient Roman HistoryRoman law, ancient legal history, ancient history, documentary papyri, Latin legal documentsAncient Roman Religion
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      Roman HistoryAncient MedicineRoman Archaeology
This paper discusses two scanty but complex groups of sources which seem to suggest that Thursday (dies Iovis, that is, Jupiter’s Day in the Roman planetary seven-day week) was a day of rest in honour of Jupiter during the later imperial... more
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      Roman HistoryEarly ChristianityRoman ReligionLate Antiquity
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      Roman HistoryIdentity (Culture)Ancient Greek HistoryRoman Greece
This article examines the evidence for production activities in the cities of Roman North Africa and shows how the importance of urban craft production has been largely overlooked in many discussions of the ancient economy. It is usually... more
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      HistoryAncient HistoryEconomic HistoryArchaeology
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      Ancient HistoryRoman HistoryRoman EmpireSeveran Age
This article considers a group of inscriptions, ranging in date from the late second to late third centuries ad, which indicates that low-ranked members of the Roman army gained access to equestrian rank in this period. The inscriptions... more
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      Ancient HistoryRoman HistoryLatin EpigraphyRoman Army
Summary: Rome’s pre-Imperial circuit walls pose a particular problem of reconstruction: collectively, their 11 km course represents the largest monument of the early city, but our understanding of this single structure is based on an... more
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      Roman HistoryRome, City ofTopography of Ancient Rome (Archaeology)Ancient Rome
Was the Roman world caught in a Malthusian trap? In this survey, I draw on a wide range of evidence – from archeological data to city size estimates – to argue that Malthusian constraints were not binding over long periods. Market-size... more
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      Economic HistoryRoman HistoryHistorical DemographyMalthus and the population debate
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    • Roman History
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      Roman HistoryGreek EpigraphyRoman provincial administrationRoman provinces
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      Economic HistoryArchaeologyClassicsRoman History
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      Roman HistoryLiteracyEpigraphy (Archaeology)Roman Epigraphy
In his paper the author examines the sources of the supposed Western Roman military expedition of Emperor Avitus in Pannonia in 455 that was thought to be the last Roman military action in the territory of the former Roman province.... more
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      Roman HistoryEarly Medieval HistoryLate AntiquityArchaeology of Roman Pannonia
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      Roman HistoryAncient economyImperialismRoman Archaeology
The progradation of the Medjerda delta has been the subject of many studies since the 19th century. The scale and the rapidity of this phenomenon interested researchers in various fields early on, such as geomorphology, geology,... more
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      PalaeogeographyArchaeologyClassical ArchaeologyRoman History
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      Roman HistoryVictorian StudiesColonialismHistory of Imperialism
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      HistoryAncient HistoryCultural StudiesClassical Archaeology